Suits & Sandals offers internships in Web Design/Development, for students in their Junior year or later, with a focus of exposing interns to a variety of topics that web professionals need to be aware of. Should have a basic understanding of HTML5, CSS3, and Javascript and have a desire to learn more about building web environments as a whole. Experience in SCSS/SASS, Node, PHP, or other languages a plus.

Internship can be shaped to focus more on design or development depending on the intern but will touch upon: mobile first responsive web design, UX design, front end strategies, web performance (page speed etc), and web page accessibility.

SummerTech’s Coditum Labs, located right here on the campus of SUNY Purchase College, is opening this fall in our beautiful new space in Fort Awesome. We have positions available for SUNY Purchase students who are interested in teaching coding to middle and high school students. Classes run from 3:30pm until 6pm on weekdays and from 10am to 3pm on weekends.

We are looking for motivated teachers for Java, Python, HTML, and CSS. Hourly pay is $20. We work and reside in Fort Awesome. Hone your own coding skills while teaching it to a younger generation.

To apply, please send a resume to jobs@summertech.net and we will contact you for an interview.

Held annually since 2011, the Eyeo Festival brings together creative coders, data designers and creators working at the intersection of data, art & technology for inspiring talks, workshops, labs and events. The festival for 2016 will take place June, 6-9 in Minneapolis, MN.

With ticket at a high price, students can apply to be volunteers to also free gain admission. Applications close January 9th.

The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Education and Research Building, mezzanine

Registration is OPEN

This Studio invites participants to experiment and work together, build their own objects, invent universal symbols, and reflect on design in the digital age. Workshops, conversations, and Friday-night “social hours” are led by designers, artists, and musical collaborators including Yuri Suzuki, Juan Cortés, Yuka Honda of Cibo Matto, Michna, and Ghostly International, among others. Featured design objects include the Arduino, littleBits, Colour Chaser, Ototo, and more. Visit MoMa Design Studio to learn more and register for a workshop.

We are looking for two docents for Eyebeam’s programs and exhibitions in our South Street Seaport Cultural District space through the summer and fall. Making Patterns, an exhibition on computational fashion, runs until September 17. From October 1 to December 31, there will be continued docent opportunities for our next exhibition, Outside/In, which highlights Eyebeam residents working at the interface between the public and private. Ideally, a docent would have experience as an educator and have a passion for arts and technology.

Please e-mail David Borgonjon at david dot borgonjon atsymbol eyebeam period org with a cover letter and resume with the subject line “SOUTH STREET DOCENT”. This position begins on September 1. The gallery hours are 12-7, Tuesday-Saturday, and we are flexible about the exact staffing schedule. Compensation is $13/hr.

Google Summer of Code is a global program that offers post-secondary student developers ages 18 and older stipends to write code for various open source software projects. Many open source projects are a part of GSOC, including some affiliated with ITP alum/staff/faculty. One project is Clojure, developed by David Nolen. Another such project is Processing (which includes p5.js).

If you are interested in participating, read the FAQ, sign-up and apply. If you are accepted, the stipend is $5,000.

Processing is looking for proposals related to creating tools and libraries, as well as expanding the capabilities of p5.js. If you have specific questions, you can post on the Processing forum or write me directly. Here are the relevant links:

Note that students graduating in May are eligible –“As long as you are accepted into or enrolled in a college or university program as of 00:01 UTC on 27 April, 2015, you are eligible to participate in the program.”

The deadline is March 27 at 19:00 UTC. No late applications are considered under any circumstances!

CALLING ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS, GRADUATE STUDENTS, AND RECENT GRADUATES!

Creative Time is excited to announce that this summer we are offering paid internship positions. Running June 1st through August 7th, we’ll be offering 10 positions across all departments, including Marketing & Communications, Development, Programming, Executive & Operations, and Global Initiatives. These 10-week, four-day-a-week positions will each receive a $2,250 stipend. Besides gaining hands-on experience producing projects, developing research and contributing to organizational goals, interns will also participate in both internal and external planning meetings, attend staff presentations, and travel to local cultural institutions for behind-the-scenes tours.

Department descriptions can be found on our website here and the application can be found here, with a deadline of March 31st. We encourage undergraduate, graduate and very recent graduates (within the last year) to apply. International applicants will be considered but must make their own visa, travel, and accommodation arrangements.
Please send application materials to internships@creativetime.org, and be sure to forward this to anyone who might be interested!

What: A two-week program in the history and contemporary practice of publication.

Where: The program will take place at Triple Canopy’s venue in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and will include visits to studios of artists and designers, archives, and cultural institutions.

Who: We invite applications from higher-level college students, graduate students, and recent college graduates. Prospective participants might have backgrounds in areas such as writing, art, literature, art history, new media, and design.

Cost: Tuition is free, though participants must arrange and pay for their travel and accommodation. All reading and viewing materials will be provided free of cost.

During the Publication Intensive, Triple Canopy editors and invited artists, writers, and technologists will lead discussions and workshops with participating students, who will research, analyze, and enact an approach to publication that hinges on today’s networked forms of production and circulation but also mines the history of print culture and artistic practice.

The Publication Intensive will address such questions as: How have artists, writers, and designers used the pages of magazines and books as sites of and material for experimentation? How have new-media publications challenged conventions of authorship and reception, only to have those very challenges soon become the foundation of the new economy? How have artists, writers, designers, and technologists responded to ensuing changes in the media landscape? And how have responses differed in areas with disparate resources and relationships to technology? What are the politics of access and identity associated with online public forums and media?

Magnum Foundation is seeking an Assistant for their Photography, Expanded Program. Magnum Foundation provides photographers working in the public interest with the support they need to produce meaningful, high-impact visual storytelling projects across issues, borders and disciplines. Photography, Expanded is a Magnum Foundation initiative inspiring documentary photographers to expand their storytelling beyond the still image. Through intensive workshops and panel discussions, photographers have been learning about emerging digital tools and methods in order to engage audiences across platforms and mobilize communities around social justice issues. To learn more about Magnum Foundation and the Photography, Expanded Program, follow this link: